EU Digital Euro Wins Backing – But Lawmakers Demand Fee Waivers & Hybrid Rollout Strategy
Brussels finally warms to a digital euro—but not without strings attached.
Cost revolt brewing
Politicians want citizens shielded from transaction fees, putting pressure on the ECB’s revenue models. ‘Why should Europeans pay to use their own money?’ grumbles one MEP.
Two-track timeline
Insiders reveal plans for parallel testing: retail digital euros through licensed wallets, while banks trial wholesale settlements. A messy compromise that pleases nobody but avoids outright mutiny.
The cynical take
Watch bureaucrats turn ‘financial innovation’ into another excuse for cross-border squabbles and subsidy grabs. At least blockchain doesn’t charge by the meeting hour.
Japan Approves Major Stablecoin Project Backed by Top Banks
Still, the initiative isn’t without friction. German banking groups and conservative EU lawmakers remain wary. Critics argue that a scaled-back model – suitable for offline consumer payments but not large-scale wholesale transactions – WOULD reduce risks and avoid competing with existing financial rails. Conservative MEP Fernando Navarrete has been particularly vocal, warning against overextending the project when current clearing systems already serve institutional needs.
Despite differing views on scope and speed, the debate signals a shared recognition: Europe sees digital money as inevitable – and the race to modernize is already underway.
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